I love your theme for this week and this word in particular. When my now
22-year-old daughter was in kindergarten, she was tormented by a boy who
teased her and called her names. After some discussion of how to handle
this within the parameters of classroom rules, I suggested she call him
a troglodyte. It worked. The next day after school, she reported his
open-mouthed, dumbfounded reaction. And he didn't bother her much after that.

Thank you for choosing swear words this week. As you have mentioned that
we no longer need to depend on those worn-out terms, the only alternative I
had so far was to think of Captain Haddock from Tintin comics and his comic blasphemy to vent
out my emotions and feel good. These new words and the 'puzzled' look on
the face of recipients is the new feel-good factor that I look forward to.

From: David Mezzera (DaMezz comcast.net)
Subject: troglodyte

Gene Roddenberry was ahead of his time in his terminology. Consider one
group of characters in the Star Trek episode The Cloud Minders.

The USS Enterprise comes to the planet Ardana to acquire zienite, a rare
mineral, but the zienite is not available because the miner class (called
Troglytes) who live in caves are rebelling against the rulers of Ardana,
who live in a cloud-city above the planet.

Troglytes? Cave dwellers, miners, reactionaries, primitives? How very
close to your word today -- troglodyte. Roddenberry must have known!

It's always seemed funny to me to think of cavemen and wrens -- the tiny,
tuneful songbirds -- as being in any way related. But "Troglodytidae"
is the family name for all the wrens, including the familiar House Wren,
the Carolina Wren of the Eastern US, the Bewick's Wren of the West, and
more. I guess they were so named for their love of foraging and nesting
in dark crevices. The Winter Wren may even add a roof of moss to its nest.

From: Jan Smith (forjhsmith gmail.com)
Subject: troglodyte

The French city of Saumur bills itself as having the greatest concentration
of troglodyte sites in the Loire Valley.

From: Lekha Warrior (lekhawarrior gmail.com)
Subject: Troglodyte

We visited Amboise in France, where many of the inhabitants have their homes
in the rock face or the caves of the area. Unbelievable, until one actually
sees it. Amboise is a very pretty place with the river Loire touching
it. Its Chateau houses the tomb of Leonardo da Vinci and apparently the
region is considered to be the cradle of the Renaissance.

From: Leora Starkey (starkeyleora hotmail.com)
Subject: troglodyte

In the small town of Matmata in Tunisia, you can stay in the Hotel Sidi Driss
and experience
the troglodyte life. Star Wars fans will recognize it as the setting for
Luke Skywalker's childhood home, but it functions as a working hotel.

The local people have developed an unusual architecture to deal with the
climate, digging down into the soft rock to make a central courtyard,
then outwards to make individual rooms. There is no negative connotation
to 'troglodyte' there. It's simply a description of the (very sensible)
living arrangements.

From: Linda Owens (lindafowens netzero.net)
Subject: troglodyte

In my long-ago cave-exploring days, when I was enjoying friendships while
escaping the drudgery of college studies, I met with a few troglodytes of
the non-human variety. I never saw any live cave fish, but once, near a
small cave system in New York, not far from Albany, I noticed brown crickets
outside the entrance, while there was a gradation of color as the crickets
spent more of their lifespan just inside the crawlspace. As I got further
into the cave, I saw crickets on the walls that were completely white from
lack of sunlight, with vestigial eyes that were pink and did not need to see.

From: Paul Tilley (roo_69 tpg.com.au)
Subject: troglodyte

I'm sure like many of my generation, when I hear or read the word troglodyte
I can't help but smile and remember the song of the same name by the Jimmy
Castor Bunch, which indicated that between cave men and women, there was
a much simpler approach to dating.

As one of your many readers who is also a longtime fan of Calvin and Hobbes,
I first came across the word jejune in a C&H strip about snowmen, where
Calvin offers his expert and entirely delightful opinion about high and low
snow art. It ends with Hobbes uttering what is one of my favorite lines
in the series, "Talent like ours carries such enormous responsibility."

It was really neat to see the illustration, "All is Vanity" with the word
vainglorious. I recently returned from a trip to Texas, where I visited
President Johnson's boyhood home in Johnson City. There I saw this same
illustration. Mrs. Johnson (LBJ's mother) had a college degree and wanted her
children and all the children in town to have the best education possible. In
her parlor, she taught speech to her children and to any interested child
from town and used this picture to teach the children that not all is as
it first appears. You can even buy a copy from the National Park Service's
visitor center.

About 20 years ago, when my son was in seventh grade, he told another boy,
"You're a massive genetic mistake."
"What's that mean?"
"It means your genes don't fit."

The boy looked down at his jeans and said, "Yes, they do."

From: Paul Kacik (pjkacik yahoo.com)
Subject: Swearing to Vent Anger

My grandfather was an immigrant from Eastern Europe who spoke English
with a strong accent. For some reason he found the capital of California
a perfect substitute for a curse word. For example if he bumped his head,
he wouldn't say "damn" or some other familiar exclamation. He would shout
(with a slight roll of the "r"): "Sacramento, California".

From: Jenka Guevara (guevaraj gmail.com)
Subject: Aram Khachaturian

Your comment on four letter words made me think of when I was little and
my mother said "Khachaturian!" instead of a bad word. This Russian composer
was not very well known in the fifties.